Subject: "Everything is canon. Not everything is true." —A Watcher, probably.
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Posted on: 2023-07-14 07:00:10 UTC

If that Watcher took a peek at Warhammer 40k at some point. {= )

But yeah, agreed. The dogma around the Sacred Timeline was always a lie, and "divergent" timelines are not inherently dangerous. I mean, consider the Universe Where Everything Is Shrimp, for instance. (Spot that crossover!) That universe could probably go on existing for ages before there was any chance of its Kang doing any serious Conquering. And maybe that's what the TVA's technomagic really calculated: not distance from the Sacred Timeline, but Probability of Kang.

That makes sense of the varying points at which they intervened with the different Lokis. It seems arbitrary and overly prescriptive from their perspective, but a) they don't know the real logic behind the TVA's actions, and b) the data set they comprise is miniscule compared to all the possible variant Lokis that may still exist in universes below the Kang threshold.

(How would each of the variant Lokis we met have caused their universe to cross the threshold? That's an interesting question!)

I guess I'm suggesting that even the idea that there was only one timeline for a while was a simplification on the part of He Who Remains. I reckon the timeline that produced him was the "Sacred" one, but then there were also all the timelines that didn't have a significantly powerful Kang in them (yet) or, theoretically, didn't have a Kang at all. For the purpose of the TVA, those didn't need to register on their equipment; when he was talking to Loki, there wasn't time to get into it.

I'm up too late to segue neatly, but: It's also important to remember that Miguel is just as unreliable a source as the TVA. Whether his beliefs are based purely on his own biased observations or something else, he's not in full possession of the facts. Or all his marbles.

~Neshomeh

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